Indigenous sacred items still 'manhandled' despite new airport security protocols, says passenger - Action News
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Indigenous

Indigenous sacred items still 'manhandled' despite new airport security protocols, says passenger

The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority launched a new protocol for passengers travelling with sacred and spiritual items in 2022 but some Indigenouspeoplesay they're still experiencing hassles at airport screenings.

So far10,000 CATSAemployees have received Indigenous cultural awareness training

Security officer at an airport wears gloves and monitors travellers as they put their luggage in big plastic bins, which move down a conveyor belt.
The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority is in charge of security screening at airports across the country. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority (CATSA) launched a new protocol for passengers travelling with sacred and spiritual items in 2022 but some Indigenouspeoplesay they're still experiencing hassles at airport screenings.

Kelly Lavallee, a member of the Mtis Nation of Ontario, said she travelsregularly between Billy Bishop airport in Toronto and Thunder Bay with cultural items such as medicines and eagle feathers, which she puts in her carry-on luggage.

"My items were manhandled. It was like show and tell for them," she said of an experience she had in Thunder Bay in May.

"It took about over an hour. Our flight was delayed."

Video reviewed by CBC Indigenous showed Lavallee's items being X-rayed by three screening officers.

She said she told the staff they were notto touch her items. Lavallee said she was toldthey had received cultural trainingand could touch anything they wantedif they believed there were safety issues involved.

Lavallee said she told the staff she felt having her sacred items treated this way was "disgraceful" and "a dishonour"to them. She said a few days training to learn an "entire worldview of people" is insufficient, based on their actions.

Woman sitting on a rock.
Kelly Lavallee, member of Mtis Nation of Ontario, told CBC Indigenous she was, Absolutely violated in the Thunder Bay airport on a return flight May 29. (Submitted by Kelly Lavallee)

Lavallee said it wasn'tthe first time this hadhappened.

"Every time I go through the airport, I have a heightened sense of anxiety because of it," she said.

She said she will be escalating the issue with CATSA.

Passengers have options

Suzanne Perseo, a spokesperson for CATSA,said in an emailthat she couldn't comment on Lavallee's experiences but thatCATSA trains screening officers to provide passengers with options to minimize the likelihood of officers handling sacred and spiritual items.

"If an item alarms, including a spiritual or sacred item, the alarm must be resolved," Perseo's email said.

"When a spiritual or sacred item is recognized by the screening officer or identified by the passenger, screening officers are instructed to work with the passenger to ensure that these items are screened with the utmost sensitivity and respect."

Perseo said complaints are reviewed and investigatedand if an "issue is identified and substantiated through the complaint process, corrective measures may be applied, including coaching or additional training."

She said screening officers are employees of the contracted security firms Paladin and GardaWorld.

So far10,000 CATSAemployees have received Indigenous cultural awareness training with 40 more in-person sessions planned for the fall, according to Heather Watts,president and partner with First Peoples Group, an Indigenous consulting firm based out of Ottawa.

Watts saidFirst Peoples Group has worked closely with CATSA to develop its screening processes. She said passengers haveoptions when travelling withsacred and spiritual items in their carry-on luggage.

"Itdoesn't mean you have to kind of like pass over everything or it has to always go through X-ray," she said.

"There's even consideration around if someone were to be your facilitator and help you through this screening process."

A facilitator is essentially a helperwho will support the passenger through the screening process, she said.

Watts advised requesting a helper at the beginning when your boarding pass is scanned and to disclose your sacred items, but this can be requested at any time before the item goes through X-ray.

CATSA is inthe process of introducing a new facilitator role at Canada's largest airportsa dedicated customer service professionalwho has received Indigenous cultural awareness learningto assist all passengers, Perseo said.

Watts said it's important that Indigenous passengers know there is a protocol in place so they are not intimidated about travelling with items like pipes.

"I think for some folks, they feel this tension of, you know, 'Do I have to leave my pipe at home if I'm going to travel somewhere or do I have to put it in checked baggage?' which feels kind of like 'I'm distanced from that item,' right?"

Perseo recommended visiting the CATSA'swebsite or calling for further clarification.

Marked improvement

Greg Dreaver, from Mistawasis in Treaty 6 territory in Saskatchewan, said he spends most of his time in Ottawaandsaidhe's seen a marked improvement in domestic airport screeningin recent years.

When hetravelled for work inthe early '90s, Dreaver said "my braid would have to be unbraided," adding that felt like a violation.

"To have some stranger ruffle through your hair, tell you to take out your braid now, you know, or take you into another room just because you're the Native in the freaking lineup. Yeah, I went through it all."

Man in regalia.
Greg Dreaver has been travelling for work since the early '90s, and says he has noticed a marked improvement flying domestically in recent years. (Submitted by Greg Dreaver)

He said the experience of Assembly of First Nations National ChiefCindy Woodhouse Nepinakearlier this year travelling with her headdressshedlight on the issue.

On a recent trip through the Halifax airport, Dreaver said hehad glass jars containing pulverized medicines such as sage and cedar in his carry-on luggage.

"They went the extra mile to really ask, to really inquire in a good way, you know," he said.

"They didn't violate my space."

Dreaver saidhe knows his rights and what he carries is a part of who he is.

"They mess with the wrong Indian when they mess with this guy They mess with all my ancestors," he said.

"Look the heck out, all your security guards, because you're going to get educated."